FAIRFIELD, Conn. (May 2, 2019) –Urgent action is needed to help tens of thousands of people forced to flee their homes following armed attacks in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, 18 humanitarian organizations warned today. Those who remain are trapped between the border of Uganda and an area of DRC that is being terrorized by armed groups. This area is also close to the Ebola outbreak which has claimed over 950 lives.

The organizations said this alarming humanitarian situation was triggered by attacks, which began on March 30 and have continued for a month in Beni territory, North Kivu. According to local health authorities, over 60,000 people have been displaced in April alone.

Of those displaced, seven thousand are sheltering in a primary school just over half a mile from the border crossing to Uganda. The only water available to drink is from the river and there are only a few toilets at the school, meaning the threat of disease spreading is high. For many people the only way to get food is to go back to their villages where they don’t feel safe, as no food is being provided.

“This is a deeply worrying situation,” said Tamba Emmanuel Danmbi-saa, Oxfam's Humanitarian Program Manager in the DRC, “these people fear going back to their homes and are being forced to live in cramped, unsanitary conditions, in an area where Ebola remains a significant threat. These people urgently need food and adequate sanitation facilities as well as clean water and health services.”

The humanitarian organizations said that ongoing violence in the area makes reaching people with aid from within DRC extremely challenging and Ugandan authorities are preparing to receive an influx of new refugees. In Uganda, they could have greater access to basic services, including health care, and the protection they need. However, there are serious concerns about reports that people are being prevented from crossing the border into Uganda at approximately, if not more than sixteen official crossings.

As a result, some displaced people are being left with little choice but to return to the villages they fled, where they are at risk of further attacks. Others are avoiding official border points and choose to cross illegally through the forests along the border or by boat across Lake Albert. This also increases the risk of Ebola being spread, since people are not being screened like they would be at the official border crossings.

“These unofficial crossings are placing people in search of refuge at an increased, and totally unnecessary risks of sexual exploitation and abuse,” said Francis Iwa, Executive Director of Care for Forced Migrants (CAFOMI), “once they enter Uganda, they also are avoiding official immigration procedures and registration as refugees - which means they may not be screened for Ebola and will be unable to access the very services prepared to assist them.”

“The governments on both sides of the border need to work with the humanitarian community to protect the displaced people and provide the help they urgently need,” said Elijah Okeyo, Country Director of the International Rescue Committee in Uganda.

Humanitarian organizations, the UNHCR and the Ugandan government are preparing to receive the displaced people. The 18 humanitarian organizations are calling on the Congolese authorities to ensure displaced people are able to cross freely and safely into Uganda.

“We estimate at least 30,000 children have been displaced in this violence, and are now living in squalid conditions,” said Heather Kerr, Save the Children’s Country Director in DRC, “many of these children would have seen terrifying violence, with family members attacked and their homes destroyed. Now, they are exposed to diseases like Ebola, which hits children hardest. This is an unacceptable situation and it needs to be resolved, now.”

The 18 humanitarian organizations are calling on Congolese and Ugandan authorities, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, international organizations and donors to urgently cooperate and pool resources to ensure people receive the help they need as quickly as possible. They also need to make sure they are prepared to cope with a new refugee influx from DRC as well as meeting the needs of refugees already in Uganda.

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